Hurricane Beryl was named on June 28, and meteorologists have tracked its progress for more than two weeks. The exceptionally long-lived system has traveled over 6,000 miles, passing through the Atlantic, the Caribbean, the Bay of Campeche and the Gulf of Mexico, making three landfalls as a destructive hurricane while setting records.
Vermont
Following Beryl’s 16-day odyssey from Africa to Texas to Vermont
At long last, though, Beryl is about to fade away. The storm has devolved into a “post-tropical cyclone,” or a leftover mid-latitude low-pressure swirl, and is trekking through Canada. In its wake, more than 1 million Houston-area customers are still without power, and people across the Mississippi and Ohio valleys and the Northeast are cleaning up from tornadoes and flooding spurred by Beryl’s remnants.
The storm caused the most severe damage in Grenada, where Beryl hit at Category 4 strength on July 1. It became a Category 5 shortly after.
Here we look back on Beryl’s journey and highlight key moments in its historic march across the Atlantic, Caribbean and United States.
16 days ago: The first National Hurricane Center outlook identified an area of disturbed weather over the eastern tropical Atlantic. It had emerged from the coast of Africa a day earlier on June 24. That was the tropical wave that would eventually become Beryl.
13 days ago: On June 28, the tropical wave became a tropical depression — the precursor to a named storm. The initial advisory noted that the storm could eventually become a hurricane as it hit the Lesser Antilles. The system was named Beryl at 11 p.m. Atlantic time.
12 days ago: Just 24 hours after being declared a tropical depression, Beryl became a 75 mph Category 1 hurricane 720 miles east-southeast of Barbados. A hurricane warning was hoisted for Barbados, with hurricane watches issued for St Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadine Islands and Grenada. (Grenada is where Beryl would eventually strike first.)
11 days ago: At 5 p.m. Atlantic time on June 30, Beryl was declared an “extremely dangerous Category 4 hurricane.” Maximum sustained winds were listed at 130 mph. This made Beryl the farthest-south Category 4 on record in the Atlantic, the earliest-forming Category 4 on record and the fastest-intensifying storm on record anytime before September.
10 days ago: On the morning of July 1, Beryl hit Carriacou, Grenada, swallowing the island in its 140 mph eyewall, or ring of destructive winds surrounding its center. Severe damage was reported. By 11 p.m. Atlantic time, Beryl became a Category 5 hurricane — the earliest on record. It would intensify overnight with winds of 160 mph.
9 days ago: On July 2, estimated maximum sustained winds in the core of Beryl reached 165 mph — 8 mph over the threshold for Category 5 status. That made it the strongest July storm on record in the Atlantic.
8 days ago: On July 3, Beryl scraped southern Jamaica as a Category 4 storm, with the eyewall shaving the southern edge of the island.
7 days ago: On July 4, Beryl’s northern side clipped the Cayman Islands as a Category 3 storm. Its violent eyewall winds stayed south of the island, meaning the Caymans mainly suffered tropical storm impacts.
6 days ago: On July 5, Beryl hit Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula. It made landfall as a high-end Category 2 with 110 mph winds, though it weakened quickly after landfall near Tulum.
5 days ago: On July 6, Beryl emerged in the southwest Gulf of Mexico as a tropical storm, having weakened and lost much of its inner core. It spent much of the next day trying to reorganize.
4 days ago: By 11 p.m. Central time on July 7, Beryl regained its status as a hurricane.
3 days ago: At 4 a.m. Central on Monday, Beryl made landfall in Matagorda, Tex., as a Category 1 hurricane. A last-minute jog to the east put Houston in the eastern eyewall — the most ferocious part of the storm. That blasted the metro area with 80 mph winds and dumped up to a foot of rain. Roughly 2.5 million customers lost power. Then an afternoon tornado outbreak swirled up across northeast Texas, southern Arkansas and western Louisiana. The National Weather Service issued 115 tornado warnings, a July record.
2 days ago: On June 9, Beryl was downgraded to a tropical depression as it slid along the Indiana-Ohio border. Its leftover swirl helped spawn several tornadoes, including a destructive twister in Mount Vernon, Ind., that demolished a warehouse.
One day ago: As Beryl’s remnant low pressure skirted along the border of eastern Canada and the northeastern United States, leftover spin helped generate rotating thunderstorms and several tornadoes in New York and neighboring states. In New York, the National Weather Service issued a state record 42 tornado warnings in a single day, leading to a grand total of more than 200 during Beryl’s three-day trek across the Lower 48 states. Significant flooding, with rainfall totals of 4 to 6 inches, meanwhile, plagued northern Vermont.
Thursday: Beryl has dissipated into a post-tropical low-pressure system northeast of Lake Ontario in southern Canada.
Vermont
Friends, family rally behind Vermont veteran charged with domestic terrorism
NEWPORT, Vt. (WCAX) – Friends and family of a Vermont veteran charged with domestic terrorism rallied in Newport Thursday, saying the charges stem from a mental health crisis and are unwarranted.
Vermont State Police say Joseph “J.J.” Millett, 38, of Newport, called a veterans crisis line in February, making suicidal statements and threatening a mass-casualty event.
Court records say Millett had guns and wrote what investigators call a manifesto. He turned himself in, and state police say they disarmed him at the barracks. He pleaded not guilty and was never formally arrested or placed in jail. He is currently in a treatment facility.
Supporters say the threats were the result of new medication and a mental health crisis. “But all the way to domestic terrorism for a man that fought overseas — he wasn’t a terrorist. He’s been fighting terrorists half his life,” said Chad Abbott, a friend who served with Millett overseas.
Abbott said he believes the charges could have unintended consequences for veterans seeking help. “These hotlines that they put out for us is to kind of get us the help we need. And now, none of us are going to want to call that,” he said.
Millett’s sister, Courtney Morin, said her brother served in the Vermont Guard for nearly 10 years and has struggled with mental health since returning home. “He suffers from depression, anxiety — he has PTSD. So, he’s actually been seeking help for his mental health for probably as long as he’s been home,” Morin said.
Orleans County State’s Attorney Farzana Leyva said the charge is warranted and that Millett was not calling for help when he contacted the crisis line. “He called the crisis helpline to make the threats. I think we have to be very clear about that. Those were threats. He did not call the crisis helpline for help. He called anonymously,” Leyva said.
She said the evidence — including repeated threats — Millett’s access to guns, and a manifesto justifies the charge and protects the public. “My priority is public safety, which is the highest priority that I have right now,” Leyva said.
Morin said she believes her brother was trying to get help. “I think he was seeking help. I mean, it’s all a trail of him seeking help, being on different meds. You know, we’re not in his head. We don’t know what he’s dealing with. And especially if you’re dealing with it alone,” Morin said.
Millett continues to receive treatment and is due back in court later this month.
Copyright 2026 WCAX. All rights reserved.
Vermont
Vermont high school playoff scores, results, stats for Thursday, March 5
The 2025-2026 Vermont high school winter season has begun. See below for scores, schedules and game details (statistical leaders, game notes) from basketball, hockey, gymnastics, wrestling, Nordic/Alpine skiing and other winter sports.
TO REPORT SCORES
Coaches or team representatives are asked to report results ASAP after games by emailing sports@burlingtonfreepress.com. Please submit with a name/contact number.
▶ Contact Alex Abrami at aabrami@freepressmedia.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter: @aabrami5.
▶ Contact Judith Altneu at JAltneu@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter: @Judith_Altneu.
THURSDAY’S H.S. PLAYOFF GAMES
D-III GIRLS BASKETBALL SEMIFINALS
At Barre Auditorium
No. 5 Vergennes (17-4) vs. No. 1 Hazen (18-2), 5:30 p.m.
No. 3 Oxbow (16-6) vs. No. 2 Windsor (16-6), 7:30 p.m.
Watch Vermont high school sports on NFHS Network
D-I BOYS BASKETBALL QUARTERFINALS
Games at 7 p.m. unless noted
No. 8 Mount Mansfield (10-11) at No. 1 Rice Memorial (17-3)
No. 12 Essex (5-16) at No. 4 Rutland (15-6)
No. 7 Burr and Burton (13-8) at No. 2 South Burlington (15-5), 6 p.m.
No. 6 BFA-St. Albans (13-8) vs. No. 3 Burlington (15-5) at Colchester, 7:30 p.m.
D-II GIRLS HOCKEY QUARTERFINALS
No. 8 Stowe (5-16) vs. No. 1 U-32 (13-6-1) at Kreitzberg Arena, 5 p.m.
(Subject to change)
Vermont
19 Vermont school budgets fail as education leaders debate need for reform
MONTPELIER, Vt. (WCAX) – Most Vermont school budgets passed Tuesday, but 19 districts and supervisory unions saw their spending plans rejected — an uptick from the nine that failed in 2025, though well below the 29 that failed in 2024.
Some education leaders say the results show communities are largely supportive of their schools.
“We’re starting to kind of equalize out again towards the normal trend of passage of school budgets each year,” said Chelsea Meyers of the Vermont Superintendents Association.
Sue Ceglowski of the Vermont School Boards Association said the results send a clear message. “Vermont taxpayers support Vermont’s public schools,” she said.
Meyers said the results also raise questions about the scope of education reform being considered in Montpelier. “If we are going to reform the system, it might not require sweeping broad changes as are being considered right now, but a more concise approach to consider that inequity,” she said.
But in districts where budgets failed, officials say structural changes are still needed. In Barre, where the budget failed, Barre Unified Union School District Board Chair Michael Boutin said the Legislature must, at a minimum, create a new funding formula. “We have to have that in order to avoid the huge increases and decreases — the huge increases that we’ve seen in the last couple years,” Boutin said.
He said the rise in school budgets is separate from why property owners are seeing sharp tax increases. The average state increase in school budgets is 4%, but the average property tax increase is 10%, driven by cost factors including health care. “There’s a complete disconnect, and that’s a product of the terrible system that we have in Vermont with our funding formula,” Boutin said.
Ceglowski says the state should address health care costs before moving forward with rapid education policy changes. “Addressing the rapid rise in the cost of school employees’ health benefits by ensuring a fair and balanced statewide bargaining process for those benefits,” she said.
The 19 districts that did not pass their budgets will need to draft new spending plans to present to voters, which often requires cuts. Twelve school districts are scheduled to vote at a later date.
Copyright 2026 WCAX. All rights reserved.
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